Showing posts with label camouflage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camouflage. Show all posts

Monday, September 17, 2012

Hiding in Plain Sight

(Above and below) Naturally, the best camouflage artists are found in nature.

Click any image for larger view.

(Above) The Lockheed Burbank aircraft factory in California just prior to WWII, before the need for camouflage. (Click image for larger view)

(Above) Same factory, after the Army Corp of Engineers layered camouflage netting over the entire factory to make it appear to be just another subdivision with small farm fields. (Click image for larger view)


(Above) The HRMS Abraham Crijnssen disguised as a tropical island, April, 1942. (Click image for larger view)

(Above) From Playboy Magazine, the model Veruschka. Though beautiful and statuesque, Veruschka spent most of her life attempting to change the way her body was perceived by others. She was, by all accounts, a conceptual artist who used the modeling platform as a means to showcase her art.

(Above) Veruschka, for Playboy, 1971.


(Above) Emma Hack goes a step further by introducing a new object, in this case the owl, to further throw off our eye to the camouflaged woman. (Click image for larger view)


(Above) Emma Hack, an artist involved in fashion, again uses patterned wallpaper as a foil in which to hide her model. (Click image for larger view)


(Above) Dutch artist Desiree Palmen, who lives in Rotterdam, takes photographs of a particular place, then uses a person dressed in clothes she has painted perfectly to blend into the background. (Click image for larger view)

(Above) Desiree Palmen, Park Bench, 1999. (Click image for larger view)

(Above) Liu Bolin, camouflage artist, China.

(Above) Liu Bolin, camouflage artist, China

(Above) Liu Bolin, a “camouflage artist” from China, says that his artwork about “hiding” is a political statement. (Click image for larger view)

(Above) Liu Bolin, camouflage artist, China, disappears in plain sight. (Click image for larger view)

(Above) Liu Bolin, China. (Click image for larger view)


I STARTED OUT THIS MORNING INTENT ON DOING A POST about the Chinese artist Liu Bolin. Now, midstream in my research, I realize that I cannot do a post just on him without attempting to put what he does into some sort of context. What does the idea of camouflage mean? How has it been used and how did the process become co-joined with art? Without question, Bolin’s art is powerful stuff, but I will attempt to explore the whole idea of camouflage and how his art fits into the idea of transformation.

Liu Bolin’s art is about camouflaging himself as a means of political protest in his own country. His political protest against the Chinese government is a statement against repression (the authorities shut down his studio in 2005). He has written that, in nature, many animals, insects and creatures have the ability to alter and adapt their physical appearance to their surroundings. This is a defensive measure to protect themselves from predators.

Chinese artist Liu Bolin desires to survive in a country that is a predator to him. Creatively, he is saying, “I must blend in to survive, I cannot be different.” His art is telling the western world about the repressive state in which he attempts to survive.

As an artistic statement, you have two things at work here. One, is the actual process and performance of creating the illusion. That in itself must be carefully orchestrated for the next and most important part—the photograph. In the end, it is the photograph that carries the weight of the process.

At the same time, Emma Hack is a talented Australian make up artist, stylist, hairdresser and artist who paints on the human body. No political statement here—just a way to work with fashion directors in a new, creative and fun way. Visually, the viewer must take extra care to disentangle the human being from the surroundings.

And, Dutch artist Desiree Palmen, is doing a thing that is quite akin to Liu Bolin’s art—except her art has more to do with being unseen and undetected. Palmen’s prior study was involved in biology and geology—so her work stems from her understanding of the natural world.

Mankind, on the other hand, even with his superior intellect—cannot alter his appearance naturally without creating a new physical covering of some kind (like ordinary hunting camouflage, etc.) And therein lies the connection between these images. With man, camouflage is an artificial thing, something brought in and applied. With nature, it just is.


“We live among its people now, hiding in plain sight, but watching over them in secret, waiting, protecting.” Optimus Prime, from the film “Transformers.”

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Graphic Design and Abstraction for WWI British Ships

(Above) The Father of Razzle Dazzle camouflage Norman Wilkinson. Click any image for larger view.


(Above) Early graphic design for painting ships. Click any image for larger view.


(Above) Graphic design for ship and photo of actual ship below. Click any image for larger view.




Click any image for larger view.


(Above) This ship is pretty wack! Click any image for larger view.

Click any image for larger view.











THE SITUATION: You’re the Fleet Admiral of the Navy in World War I. Your ships are being sunk at an alarming rate by the devastatingly effective German U-Boat. The traditional camouflage isn’t working because your environment (sea and sky) changes with the weather. What do you do?

THE INSIGHT

It’s not where you are—it’s where you’re going.

World War I occurred from 1914–1918; back then sinking an enemy battleship was a three-step process:

Step 1: Locate your target’s position and plot its course.
Step 2: Determine the ship’s speed and confirm the direction it is heading.
Step 3: Launch torpedo not directly at the ship, but where you think it’s going to be by the time the torpedo reaches the ship.

*Remember this is early 20th century warfare, weapons don’t travel at the speed they do today.

THE SOLUTION:
HIT THEM WITH THE RAZZLE DAZZLE

Forget about not being seen, that only solves their first problem. Focus on confusing them so they don’t know where you’re going. Then their torpedoes will be shot in vain because they thought you zigged when you really zagged.

British Artist and naval officer Norman Wilkinson had this very insight and pioneered the Dazzle Camouflage movement (known as Razzle Dazzle in the United States). Norman used bright, loud colors and contrasting diagonal stripes to make it incredibly difficult to gauge a ship’s size and direction.

It was cheap, effective, and widely-adopted during the War. Check out the incredible photographs above.

Via here.

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